AGA FUN-GCB-2001 Fundamentals of Gas Combustion - Combined Manual and Workbook《气体燃烧基本原理.综合手册和业务手册.第三版 XH0105》.pdf
《AGA FUN-GCB-2001 Fundamentals of Gas Combustion - Combined Manual and Workbook《气体燃烧基本原理.综合手册和业务手册.第三版 XH0105》.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《AGA FUN-GCB-2001 Fundamentals of Gas Combustion - Combined Manual and Workbook《气体燃烧基本原理.综合手册和业务手册.第三版 XH0105》.pdf(142页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、 FUNDAMENTALS OF GAS COMBUSTION THIRD EDITION Fundamentals of Gas Combustion Combined Manual and Workbook June 2001 ORIGINALLY PREPARED BY American Gas Association Laboratories FOR American Gas Association 400 N. Capitol Street N.W. Washington, DC 20001 iiCatalog No. XH0105 Third Edition Copyright 2
2、001, Revised June 2001 Registered by American Gas Association Printed in the United States of America iii FOREWARD This manual was originally prepared under the direction of the American Gas Association and Gas Appliance Manufacturers Association Joint Committee for Customer Service. It was written
3、by James C. Griffiths, Senior Research Engineer, and J. Fred Parr, Manager of Engineering Services, American Gas Association Laboratories (Cleveland, Ohio). The 1996 Edition was prepared by Vera Kam, Project Supervisor, and Doug DeWerth, Consultant, A.G.A. Laboratories, Research and Development Divi
4、sion, and updates the 1973 edition. The 2000 Edition was edited and prepared by Mary Smith Carson and James W. Freeman, Consultants, WE propane (C3H8) has three carbon atoms and eight hydrogen atoms; butane (C4H10) has four carbon atoms and ten hydrogen atoms. Figure 1 shows how carbon and hydrogen
5、atoms are combined in fuel gases. The number of carbon and hydrogen atoms in these fuel gases affect the nature of each gas. More atoms in the compound, particularly heavier carbon atoms, make the gas heavier. Larger numbers of carbon and hydrogen atoms in a fuel gas release more heat when the gas i
6、s burned. For this reason, the heat content of butane, for instance, is greater than that of methane. Other characteristics of fuel gases also are related to their chemical make-up. Figure 1. Graphical illustration of four common hydrocarbon fuel gases.4These include the ease with which their flames
7、 can be controlled and utilized. Common fuel gases are not simply one kind of hydrocarbon, but are mixtures of hydrocarbon gases. They may contain other gases as well, such as free hydrogen, carbon dioxide and nitrogen. For example, a natural gas might contain 94 percent methane, 3 percent ethane an
8、d 3 percent of other gases. The presence of each of these gases in the fuel gas has some effect on the nature of the gas. NATURAL GASES The common explanation for the formation of natural gas is called the “organic theory.” During untold millions of years before human life developed on this planet,
9、dead and dying plants and animals washed down into long lost lakes and oceans. These remains were covered by mud and sand. In time, this accumulation exerted high pressures on the buried materials by its own weight. In turn, these pressures created high temperatures. Chemical action took place and c
10、onverted the remains of these once living things into gas and oil. At the same time, the mud and sand changed into rocks, much of it porous. Oil and gas seeped into these tiny holes in the rock, to be stored there under high pressure beneath layers of more solid rock above. Oil and gas also collecte
11、d in dome-like formations, or in traps created by the upthrust of the earths crust. Today, gas and crude oil are sometimes found together, but most of the reserves of gas in the United States are not dissolved in or in contact with oil. Gas from a well may contain small amounts of condensables. Thes
12、e are gases that can be removed as liquids through moderate changes in temperature and pressure, or both. Condensables, which contain sulfur, are important for two practical reasons. First, they can corrode some metals, more so if moisture also is present in the gas. Second, they often have a strong
13、 odor. Water and condensables are usually removed from fuel gases to help prevent corrosion of pipelines through which the gas is transported. The remaining methane, ethane and inert gases have no odor, color or taste. Propane and butane also are nearly odorless. Studies have shown that natural gas
14、is non-toxic and non-poisonous. LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GASES Liquefied petroleum gases (LPG or LP gas) are propane or butane, or a mixture of the two. These fuel gases are obtained from natural gas, or as a by-product from the refining of oil. LP gases are trans-ported and stored in tanks. They are use
15、d usually in areas in which pipeline gas is not available, as a reserve gas supply in some cities and by some industries, and as the fuel for some engines. Since LPG is stored under pressure, much of the gas is in liquid form in the tanks. As the fuel is drawn from the tank it turns again to gas and
16、 is burned in the same way as other fuel gases. MANUFACTURED AND MIXED GASES As its name states, manufactured gas is man-made. The name applies to a number of gases produced on a large scale for use as fuel gases and some that are produced 5as by-products in other manufacturing operations. For examp
17、le, in iron-making, large amounts of gases are produced that are used as fuel gases. Widespread use of manufactured fuel gases preceded that of natural gas by many years. As early as the 1600s in Europe, it was shown that a usable fuel gas could be produced by heating coal. In 1813, Westminister Bri
18、dge in London was lighted by manufactured gas lamps. Other cities quickly followed suit. Baltimore, in 1816, was the first American city to light its streets with gas. Paris followed in 1820. The use of manufactured fuel gases has declined greatly in the United States. Today, over 99 percent of sale
19、s by gas distribution and transmission companies are natural gas. Some manufactured gases are still used in Europe and other parts of the world, but use of natural gas has risen sharply in these areas also in recent years. Mixed gas, as the name implies, is a man-made mixture of gases. A common exam
20、ple is a mixture of natural gas and manufactured gas. ODORANTS ADDED TO GAS Natural gas processed to remove condensables and moisture has little or no odor and no color. Odorants are added to the gas before distribution to aid in leak detection. Most odorants used are colorless liquids containing su
21、lfur compounds. These compounds give a garlic-like odor that most people associate with a “gassy” smell. Odorants can be put into a gas stream as liquids by various types of odorizers; e.g., by a drip-type odorizer. The odorants vaporize in the pipelines and mix with the fuel as gases. With the abso
22、rption type odorizer, odorants are added to the gas stream in a vapor or gaseous form. The amount of odorant needed to produce a strong odor in the gas is quite small. The amount of sulfur added in this way is too small to create a problem of corrosion either in the pipelines or by flue gases. The s
23、ulfur burns in the gas flame to produce little or no odor or harmful by-products. For sulfur sensitive processes using natural gas, the odorant can be scrubbed out prior to the final process, as is done in glass making. SPECIFIC GRAVITY The density of a substance is the amount of mass (weight) in a
24、given volume. Fresh water, for instance, has a density of 62.4 pounds per cubic foot. Often, it is more useful to refer to the specific gravity of a substance. Specific gravity is the weight of a substance compared to the same volume of some reference substance. Fresh water is used as the reference
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